Disclosed are methods to form a FinFET diode of high efficiency, designed to resolve the degradation problem with a conventional FinFET diode arising from reduced active area, and a method of fabrication. The FinFET diode has a doped substrate, two spaced-apart groups of substantially parallel, equally-spaced, elongated semiconductor fin structures, dielectric layers formed between the two groups and among the fin structures for insulation, a plurality of substantially equal-spaced and parallel elongated gate structures perpendicularly traversing both groups of the fin structures, and two groups of semiconductor strips respectively formed lengthwise upon the two groups of the fin structures. The two groups of semiconductor strips are doped to have opposite conductivity types, p-type and n-type. The FinFET diode further has metal contacts formed upon the semiconductor strips. In an embodiment, the semiconductor strips may be integrally formed with the fin structures by epitaxial growth and in-situ doped.
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8. A method of forming a device, comprising:
providing a semiconductor substrate doped to have either a first conductivity type or a second conductivity type opposite the first conductivity type;
forming a first group and a second group of substantially equal-spaced, parallel, elongated, and equal numbered semiconductor fin structures formed over the substrate, the first and second groups being spaced-apart;
forming a plurality of substantially equal-spaced and parallel elongated gate structures formed upon the first and the second groups of fin structures such that each gate structure traverses both the first and the second groups of fin structures perpendicularly;
doping a top portion of each of the first group fin structures to have the first conductivity type; and
doping a top portion of each of the second group fin structures to have the second conductivity type.
13. A method of forming a device, comprising:
providing a semiconductor substrate doped to have a first conductivity type;
forming a first plurality of substantially parallel, elongated fin structures over the substrate, each fin structure in the first plurality of fin structures having a semiconductor strip of the first conductivity type extending lengthwise thereon;
forming a second plurality of substantially parallel, elongated fin structures over the substrate, the second plurality of fin structures being spaced from the first plurality of fin structures, and each fin structure in the second plurality of fin structures having a semiconductor strip of a second conductivity type extending lengthwise thereon, wherein the second conductivity type is opposite of the first conductivity type;
forming a first elongated gate structure upon and perpendicularly traversing both the first and second plurality of fin structures; and
forming a second elongated gate structure formed upon and perpendicularly traversing both the first and second plurality of fin structures, the second elongated gate structure being spaced from the first elongated gate structure.
1. A method of forming a semiconductor device, the method comprising:
providing a substrate having opposing first and second ends;
forming a first and a second groups of one or more substantially equal-spaced, parallel, elongated, and equal numbered semiconductor fin structures upon the substrate adjacent the first and the second ends, respectively, the first and second groups being spaced apart from each other;
forming a plurality of dielectric strips to be disposed among the first and the second groups of fin structures for electric insulation from one another;
implanting the substrate with a dopant of either a first conductivity type or a second conductivity type opposite the first conductivity type;
forming one or more substantially equal-spaced and parallel elongated gate structures formed upon the first and the second groups of fin structures such that each gate structure traverses both the first and the second groups of fin structures perpendicularly;
forming a first group of one or more doped semiconductor strips having the first conductivity type lengthwise upon the first group of fin structures, respectively; and
forming a second group of one or more second doped semiconductor strips having the second conductivity type lengthwise upon the second group of fin structures, respectively.
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This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/951,202, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,093,566, filed on Jul. 25, 2013, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/747,764, filed on Dec. 31, 2012. The entireties of both disclosures are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The semiconductor industry has progressed into nanometer technology process nodes in pursuit of higher device density, higher performance, and lower costs. As this progression takes place, challenges from both fabrication and design issues have resulted in the development of three-dimensional designs, such as fin-like field effect transistor (FinFET) devices. The use of FinFET devices has been gaining popularity in the semiconductor industry. FinFET devices offer several advantages over traditional Metal-Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor (MOSFET) devices (also referred to as planar devices). These advantages may include better chip area efficiency, improved carrier mobility and fabrication processing that is compatible with the fabrication processing of planar devices. Thus, it may be desirable to design an integrated circuit (IC) chip using FinFET devices for a portion of, or the entire IC chip.
A typical FinFET device is fabricated with a thin fin-like structure called a “fin”, extending from a substrate, and a gate provided over (e.g., wrapping around) the fin. The fin structure is made of semiconductor material, typically silicon, and if used as a transistor, has a current channel formed inside. When the FinFET device is used as a transistor, the gate is used to control the current in the channel.
A diode can be built on a FinFET structure using silicon-on-insulator (SOI) technology in a fashion generally identical to those built in today's planar SOI technologies or bulk CMOS technologies. Compared to the traditional planar semiconductor diodes, however, the diodes constructed by using the FinFET structure have a shortcoming of reduced efficiency due to the degradation caused by the fin structures. The presence of plural fin structures in the FinFET diodes reduces the active area for producing injection current, and thereby decreases efficiency of the diodes, defined by injection current generated per a unit cell area.
Therefore, there is a need to provide a FinFET diode and a method to manufacture the same that has a higher efficiency than the conventional FinFET diodes.
The present disclosure is best understood from the following detailed description when read with the accompanying figures. It is emphasized that, in accordance with the standard practice in the industry, various features are not drawn to scale and are used for illustration purposes only. In fact, the dimensions of the various features may be arbitrarily increased or reduced for clarity of discussion.
It is understood that the following disclosure provides many different embodiments, or examples, for implementing different features of the invention. Specific examples of components and arrangements are described below to simplify the present disclosure. These are, of course, merely examples and are not intended to be limiting. For example, the formation of a first feature over or on a second feature in the description that follows may include embodiments in which the first and second features are formed in direct contact, and may also include embodiments in which additional features may be formed between the first and second features, such that the first and second features may not be in direct contact. In addition, the present disclosure may repeat reference numerals and/or letters in the various examples. This repetition is for the sake of simplicity and clarity and does not in itself dictate a relationship between the various embodiments and/or configurations discussed. Moreover, various features may be arbitrarily drawn in different scales for the sake of simplicity and clarity.
The various aspects of the present disclosure, illustrated in
Now referring to the figures,
It is known that due to the presence of plural fin structures in the FinFET diodes, the active area for producing injection current becomes reduced, thereby decreasing the efficiency of the diodes, which is defined by injection current generated per a unit cell area. For example, in the particular FinFET structure in
At step 210, a substrate is provided.
In the present embodiment, the substrate 302 includes a single semiconducting material such as bulk silicon. Alternatively, the substrate 302 may comprise other suitable elementary semiconducting materials, such as germanium in crystal; a compound semiconductor, such as silicon carbide, silicon germanium, gallium arsenic, gallium phosphide, indium phosphide, indium arsenide, and/or indium antimonide; or combinations thereof. The substrate 302 may also include an insulator layer on top of the semiconductor layer. The insulator layer comprises any suitable material, including silicon oxide, sapphire, other suitable insulating materials, and/or combinations thereof. An exemplary insulator layer may be a buried oxide layer (BOX). The insulator is formed by any suitable process, such as separation by implantation of oxygen (SIMOX), oxidation, deposition, and/or other suitable process. Alternatively, the substrate 302 may further include another semiconductor layer on top of an insulator layer to form a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) substrate, which can be fabricated using wafer bonding, and/or other suitable methods. The substrate 302 may comprise any suitable crystallographic orientation (e.g., a (100), (110), (111), or (001) crystallographic orientation).
At step 220, one or more substantially parallel elongated semiconductor fin structures 310 are formed upon the substrate 302. The formation of the fin structures 310 is achieved by using a layer of photoresist 304 and a hard mask layer 306 disposed upon the substrate 302 and suitable processes including deposition, photolithography, and/or etching processes as depicted in
The photoresist 304 may be any suitable material used in the art, such as Poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), Poly (methyl glutarimide) (PMGI), Phenol formaldehyde resin (DNQ/Novolac), SU-8, and may be either positive or negative photoresist. These materials are all applied as a liquid and, generally, spin-coated to ensure uniformity of thickness. After prebaking, the photoresist layer 304 is exposed to an ultraviolet (UV), deep ultraviolet (DUV) or electron beam through a pattern via a photomask. The exposure to light causes a chemical change that allows some of the photoresist to be removed by a special solution, called “developer” by analogy with photographic developer. For positive photoresist, the most common type, the exposed part becomes soluble in the developer. After going through a post-exposure baking process, the remaining (unexposed) parts of the photoresist 304 form a mask that resists etching.
The hard mask layer 306 is needed to form dielectric strips between the fin structures 310 for insulation in a later step, and may be formed upon the substrate 302 and below the photoresist masks 304 by any suitable process. It may be composed of silicon nitride (Si3Ni4) or any suitable material, such as SiON, SiC, SiOC, spin-on glass (SOG), a low-k film, tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS), plasma enhanced CVD oxide (PE-oxide), high-aspect-ratio-process (HARP) formed oxide, and/or other suitable material.
After forming the photoresist masks 304 and a hard mask layer 306 as shown in
In another example, silicon fin structures 310 may be formed by patterning and etching a silicon layer deposited overlying an insulator layer (for example, an upper silicon layer of a silicon-insulator-silicon stack of an SOI substrate). Alternatively, the fin structures 310 may be formed by a double-patterning lithography (DPL) process. DPL is a method of constructing a pattern on a substrate by dividing the pattern into two interleaved patterns. DPL allows enhanced feature (e.g., fin) density. Various DPL methodologies may be used including double exposure (e.g., using two mask sets), forming spacers adjacent features and removing the features to provide a pattern of spacers, resist freezing, and/or other suitable processes.
When etching the hard mask layer 306 and the substrate 302, any known etching processes may be used, such as wet etching, dry etching, or plasma etching, but when an anisotropic etching is desired, a plasma etching may be used. In one embodiment, etching the polymer may use a mixture of process gases. For instance, oxygen and tetrafluoromethane (CF4), when mixed together for use in plasma etching, create the oxyfluoride ion (OF−). The oxyfluoride ion is a powerful etching agent for polymeric substances. This ion is particularly adept at cutting the carbon-carbon molecular bonds in the polymer backbone and removing the molecule quickly. The etchants that may be used for polymer etching may include, but are not limited to, wet etchants such as potassium hydroxide (KOH), ethylene diamine and pyrocatechol (EDP), or Tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH), or plasma etchants such as Cl2, CCl4, SiCl2, BCl3, CCl2F2, CF4, SF6, or NF3.
After etching portions of the hard mask layer 306 and the silicon substrate 302, then the photoresist masks 304, which are no longer needed, are removed by a process called an ashing. This process usually requires a liquid “resist stripper”, which chemically alters the resist so that it no longer adheres to the hard mask layer 306. Alternatively, the photoresist masks 304 may be removed by a plasma containing oxygen, which oxidizes it.
Also,
Next, at step 230, a plurality of dielectric strips 320 are formed within the trenches 315 defined among the fin structures 310 for insulation, i.e., to electrically isolate the fin structures 310 from one another, by utilizing isolation technology, such as local oxidation of silicon (LOCOS) or shallow trench isolation (STI). For that, a dielectric material is deposited by spin-on coating or spin-on dielectric (SOD) process, CVD, or any other suitable deposition processes upon the fin structures 310, the hard mask spacers 306, and the trenches 315 to form a dielectric layer. After the deposition, the upper portions of deposited dielectric layer may be removed by, in an embodiment, a Chemical Mechanical Polishing/Planarization (“CMP”) process down to the level of the top surfaces of the hard mask spacers 306, as shown in
After formation of the plurality of dielectric strips 320, the spacers 306 may be removed by an etching process, defining trenches 325 between dielectric strips 320 and upon the fin structures 310 as shown in
Next, at step 240, the substrate 302 is doped by a suitable implantation process as depicted in
After finishing implantation of the substrate 302, the dielectric strips 320 may be partially removed by a suitable etching process, defining fin recesses 335 between the fin structures 310 as shown in
Next, at step 250, one or more elongated gate structures 330 are formed over the fin structures 310 as depicted in
The gate structures 330 may be formed by any suitable process known in the art, including deposition, photolithography patterning, and etching processes. The deposition of a suitable gate material to form a gate electrode layer may include chemical vapor deposition (CVD), physical vapor deposition (PVD), atomic layer deposition (ALD), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), high density plasma CVD (HDPCVD), metal organic CVD (MOCVD), remote plasma CVD (RPCVD), plasma enhanced CVD (PECVD), plating, other suitable methods, and/or combinations thereof. The photolithography patterning processes may include photoresist coating (e.g., spin-on coating), soft baking, mask aligning, exposure, post-exposure baking, developing the photoresist, rinsing, drying (e.g., hard baking), other suitable processes, and/or combinations thereof. Alternatively, the photolithography exposing process may be implemented or replaced by other proper methods such as maskless photolithography, electron-beam writing, and ion-beam writing. The etching processes may include dry etching, wet etching, and/or other etching methods (e.g., reactive ion etching). After formation of a gate layer by deposition, any surplus of the gate layer in its upper part may be removed by a process of CMP.
In one embodiment, a gate dielectric layer may be further formed between the gate structures 330 and the fin structures 310 by suitable processes. The dielectric material may include commonly used materials such as oxides, nitrides, oxynitrides, high-K dielectrics such as Ta2O5, Al2O3, HfO, SiTiO3, HfSiO, HfSiON, or combinations thereof. In another embodiment, gate spacers (not shown) may be further formed on the sidewalls of the gate dielectric layer and gate structures.
Finally at step 260, a plurality of doped semiconductor strips 340 are formed, as source and drain (S/D) regions, upon the fin structures 310 as shown in
In one embodiment, the strips 340 may be formed via a selective epitaxial growth process. The epitaxy process may include chemical vapor deposition (CVD) including vapor-phase epitaxy (VPE) and/or ultra-high vacuum CVD (UHV-CVD), physical vapor deposition (PVD), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), high density plasma CVD (HDPCVD), metal organic CVD (MOCVD), remote plasma CVD (RPCVD), Electro-less deposition, plating, or any suitable processes known in the art and/or combinations thereof. Such an epitaxial process may use either gaseous and/or liquid precursors. The semiconducting material composing the strips 340 may be, in one embodiment, the same material as the fin structures 310 that are of the same material as the substrate 302 in the particular embodiment of the process depicted in
During their formation by an epitaxial growth, the two groups of strips, 340a and 340b, may be in-situ doped by any suitable implantation processes known in the art. They are doped respectively with p-type impurities, such as boron or BF2, and with n-type impurities, such as phosphorus or arsenic to form doped p-type and n-type regions. As is known in the art, masks such as photo resists may be formed to cover regions not to be implanted. The impurity concentration may be between about 1013/cm3 and about 1019/cm3, or even greater than 1020 /cm3 to produce heavily doped regions. After the implantation process, one or more annealing processes may be performed to activate the S/D regions. The annealing processes comprise rapid thermal annealing (RTA) and/or laser annealing processes. In the resulting structure after implantation, a P-N junction is formed between either the P+ region or N+ region, comprising respectively the two groups of strips, 340a and 340b, and the fin structures thereunder, depending on the type of the doped well. For example, if the well is doped with p-type impurities (P-well), the P-N junction is formed between N+ doped group of semiconductors strips and the fin structures thereunder.
After formation of the doped strips 340 at step 260, a dielectric material may be further deposited thereon by the spin-on coating or spin-on dielectric (SOD) process, CVD, or any other suitable deposition processes to electrically isolate the two groups of doped strips 340a and 340b from each other, and further, each of the strips from one another. The dielectric material may be the typical silicon dioxide (SiO2), silicon oxynitride (SiON), silicon nitride (Si3N4), high-density plasma (HDP) oxides, TEOS oxides, high-k dielectric material such as a hafnium oxide (HfO2), HfSiO, HfSiON, HfTaO, HfTiO, HfZrO, zirconium oxide, aluminum oxide, hafnium dioxide-alumina (HfO2—Al2O3) alloy, titanium nitride (TiN), or any other suitable materials, or combinations thereof.
In the embodiment shown in
Lastly at step 270, one or more metal contacts are formed upon the two groups of doped strips 340a and 340b for providing a forward bias between the S/D regions. The contacts may be formed by a salicide (self-aligned silicide) process, which involves deposition of a transition metal to form a thin layer via a suitable process such as CVD, application of heat to allow the transition metal to react with exposed silicon in the active regions (source and drain) to form a low-resistance transition metal silicide, and removal of any remaining transition metal by chemical etching, leaving silicide contacts only in the active regions. The typical transition metal may include nickel, cobalt, tungsten, tantalum, titanium, platinum, erbium, palladium, or combinations thereof.
The two oppositely doped areas 440 and 450 are separated from each other by a separation greater than the mean inter-spacing among the fin structures 410 and 420 and insulated by a dielectric material filling the separation. In the embodiment shown in
In the particular embodiment shown in
In the prior art FinFET diode, schematically shown in
The FinFET diode made according to the present disclosure, described in
The FinFET diode manufactured according to a method in the present disclosure provides advantages over the FinFET diodes used in the prior art. It produces higher efficiency by mitigating the degradation problem in the conventional FinFET diodes due to the reduced active area for the presence of fin structures. Further, the method in the present disclosure provides a way of optimizing the FinFET diodes as varying the number of fin structures in a unit cell or other parameters such as bias, or STI width to fin width ratio. The FinFET diodes manufactured in the present disclosure may be used for an ESD (electrostatic discharge) diode in ESD protection circuits, or in any other types of application known in the art.
The foregoing outlines features of several embodiments so that those skilled in the art may better understand the aspects of the present disclosure. Those skilled in the art should appreciate that they may readily use the present disclosure as a basis for designing or modifying other processes and structures for carrying out the same purposes and/or achieving the same advantages of the embodiments introduced herein. Those skilled in the art should also realize that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure, and that they may make various changes, substitutions, and alterations herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.
Hu, Chia-Hsin, Hsieh, Wen-Hsing, Liang, Min-Chang, Huang, Ching-Fang, Chang, Sun-Jay, Wu, Shien-Yang, Fan, Hsueh-Shih
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